Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Wednesday, July 13, 2016

NJC alleges move to shield those living under false names-Prez, MPs urged to torpedo Missing Persons Bill

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by Shamindra Ferdinando-
 

The National Joint Committee (NJC) yesterday alleged that the Missing Persons (OMP) Bill would prevent revealing the identities of those who had been categorised as missing but found alive, and investigating them. Therefore, a major amendment to the controversial Bill was necessary, the NJC said.


Addressing the media at the National Library and Documentation Services Board, Gevindu Cumaratunga of behalf of the NJC pointed out that under Clause 13 the proposed Act, information pertaining to those who had been found alive after being reported missing couldn’t be revealed without their consent.

Sri Lanka had been blamed for thousands of disappearances during the conflict and therefore information pertaining to those living under various assumed identities in other countries must not be withheld, Cumaratunga said. The public activist said that even the relatives of those who had been found alive couldn’t be told the truth under the proposed Act.

"Could there be anything as unfair as various members of security arms being accused of disappearances while the very persons categorized as missing were living in other countries under assumed names?" Cumaratunga said.

President’s Counsel Manohara de Silva and former Digamadulla MP Rear Admiral Sarath Weerasekera (retd), President of NJC Dr Anula Wijewardene and Dimuth Gunawardena joined Cumaratunga in requesting President Maithripala Sirisena to prevent the passage of the Bill.

President’s Counsel De Silva alleged  that the proposed OMP would certainly cause Sri Lankans to be subjected to universal jurisdiction. The OMP was meant to target those who had served the country risking their lives and convict them either here or abroad, De Silva alleged, adding that the proposed mechanism would only deal with disappearances that had taken place within the Northern and Eastern Provinces.

According to De Silva, the foreign funded OMP wouldn’t be bound by the Constitution and, therefore, it could enter into agreements with foreign bodies. The President’s Counsel explained the operations which could be undertaken by the OMP much to the detriment of serving and retired military and police officers.

Responding to a query by The Island whether the OMP Bill required a two-thirds majority for passage, President’s Counsel De Silva said only a simple majority was needed.

The senior attorney-at-law De Silva said that due to the failure on their part the Bill had not been challenged in the Supreme Court within the stipulated period of seven days. The President’s Counsel said that members of the Joint Opposition, too, had failed to act thereby causing a grievous situation. The President’s Counsel asserted had the Supreme Court been moved within the stipulated time, the apex court would have intervened.

The NJC appealed to members of major political parties to discuss the proposed Bill within their parties and explore the possibility of doing away with clauses inimical to Sri Lanka. It urged members not to be deceived by those who had been promoting the interests of Western powers at the expense of national interests.

Cumaratunga emphasised that they wouldn’t oppose in anyway efforts to establish the whereabouts of those who had been reported missing during the war as well as post-conflict period.

The Foreign Ministry recently declared that Sri Lanka had one of the largest case-loads of missing persons in the world. The FM said that since 1994 various government Commissions had received over 65,000 complaints of missing persons.

Former MP Weerasekera said the agenda pursued by the Sirisena-Wickremesinghe administration couldn’t be allowed to proceed. Praising Missing Persons Commission Chairman retired High Court judge Maxwell Paranagama for disputing a recent Geneva call for a special inquiry into allegations in respect of the alleged use of cluster munitions by the Sri Lanka Air Force, the naval veteran said that the war winning military was being humiliated.
TNA talks resolution, PTA and land release with visiting US officials 

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logoBy Dharisha Bastians-Thursday, 14 July 2016

Prisoners detained under anti-terror laws, the release of lands in the North and the implementation of the October 2015 UN Human Rights Council resolution on Sri Lanka were the main focus of discussions between the Tamil National Alliance and visiting US State Department officials yesterday.

The TNA delegation, led by Opposition Leader R. Sampanthan, met visiting US Assistant Secretary for Central and South Asian Affairs Nisha Biswal and Assistant Secretary for Democracy, Human Rights and Labour Tom Malinowski for breakfast talks at the US Ambassador’s residence in Horton Place, Colombo.

TNA Spokesman Sumanthiran, who attended the meeting, said that the Tamil party had also raised concerns about delays in implementing the resolution the Government co-sponsored in Geneva in October 2015. Assistant Secretary Biswal told the TNA delegation that she had already raised this matter with the Government in her discussions, Sumanthiran said.

Sumanthiran, who spoke to reporters outside the Ambassador’s residence last morning, said that the visiting US Assistant Secretaries and the TNA delegation had discussed a “range of issues” including the constitutional process that was ongoing.

He also said that the TNA was not willing to court controversy by commenting on the ongoing debate about the inclusion of foreign judges in an accountability mechanism the Government hopes to set up.

“As and when these mechanisms are put in place or these mechanisms are discussed, the TNA will make its position known. I don’t want to get drawn into an unnecessary controversy at this stage which will achieve nothing,” the TNA Spokesman said.

Sumanthiran told Daily FT that the foreign judges question was being needlessly made into an issue at a time when the question does not arise, since the court was not yet being set up. “As with the Office of the Missing Persons, when the mechanism for the court is being set up, we will participate constructively,” the TNA Spokesman said, adding that the controversy was only serving as a tool to derail the accountability process. Provisions in Operative Paragraph 6 of the UNHRC resolution that was adopted in October 2015, specifically referring to the inclusion of foreign judges in a judicial mechanism set up to address alleged war crimes, continue to be the subject of heated debate in the country.

The TNA delegation included Northern Chief Minister C.V. Wigneswaran, Jaffna District MP M.A. Sumanthiran and the leaders of the four constituent parties of the alliance: ITAK General Secretary Marvai Senathirajah, PLOTE Leader and Northern Provincial Councillor Dharmalingam Siddharthan and EPRLF leader and former MP Suresh Premachandran and TELO Leader Selvam Adaikalanathan. 

From cookery demos to human rights – packed day for US officials

Visiting US Assistant Secretaries from the State Department on a three-day visit to Sri Lanka had a day packed with political meetings and public speaking engagements yesterday that ended with a reception hosted by the Minister of Foreign Affairs Mangala Samaraweera last evening.df

Assistant Secretary for Central and South Asian Affairs Nisha Biswal and Assistant Secretary for Democracy, Human Rights and Labour, Tom Malinowski met with Tamil National Alliance representatives last morning and held discussions with Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe at Temple Trees last afternoon.

The State Department officials also met with civil society representatives last afternoon for talks on the progress of reconciliation and accountability efforts in the island.

During the meeting, Biswal told civil society representatives that while there were some delays in the efforts, the signs were that the Government had already made some progress in implementing the resolution it co-sponsored in Geneva last October. The US officials were broadly supportive of the Government’s efforts, Daily FT learns.

Both Biswal and Malinowski also visited Parliament for lunch, where they congratulated Government and Opposition MPs for the unanimous passage of the Right to Information Act. The State Department officials also met with Speaker Karu Jayasuriya in Parliament.

Assistant Secretary Malinowski, the State Department’s focal point on Human Rights, also visited the Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka, where he met with Chairperson Dr. Deepika Udugama and other commissioners.

The pair also toured the Colombo Port yesterday. “Glad to see South Asia’s busiest Colombo Port and its potential astride the world’s most important trade routes,” the US Embassy in Colombo tweeted, quoting Assistant Secretary Biswal.

Biswal also wore a different hat briefly last morning, when she joined Sri Lanka’s renowned Chef Publis Silva of Mount Lavinia Hotel to learn the secrets of local cuisine. The cookery demonstration was recorded for telecast on state broadcaster Rupavahini.

Biswal addressed economic and business leaders in Sri Lanka, including the American Chamber of Commerce and the Rotary Club on economic ties between US and Sri Lanka at the Galle Face Hotel last evening.

The visiting US Assistant Secretaries were hosted to a dinner reception by Foreign Minister Samaraweera last night. They will tour Trincomalee for discussions with civil society and political representatives today. (DB)

A ‘reconciliation’ destined to be still-born

By Nayantha Wijesundara-2016-07-14
'Reconciliation in Sri Lanka' is a phrase doing the rounds in political circles, both national and international. True, there are problems to be discussed and deep rooted issues to be reconciled with if Sri Lanka is to enjoy a sustainable peace. Adjustments have to be made by both the Sinhalese and Tamil communities. 
But, what is necessary for reconciliation? Well, many and varied things. It could be institutional and legislative reforms, inclusion of all stakeholders in the debate, creating awareness and educating the public, reparations, an accountability mechanism acceptable to the polity to look into the overdue issue of war crimes and crimes against humanity allegedly committed during the last war, creating a Sri Lankan identity rather than emphasizing on ethnic identity, etc. Very importantly, there must be acceptance from both sides of the ethnic divide that, Sri Lanka, or parts of it, cannot be the exclusive domain of any ethnic group. But, most importantly, there must be rational and reasonable partners to discuss issues and have a constructive dialogue with. Today's column focuses on the issue of whether this or any future government has a reasonable and rational partner to discuss reconciliation.
With the LTTE gone, there is now space for constructive and rational dialogue to emerge from the Tamil side of the ethnic divide and the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) is, by default, the only candidate for the job. This is because they are the predominant Tamil political party, at present they represent the main Opposition of Sri Lanka and also because the Northern Provincial Council is governed by the TNA.
Politically, the Tamil leadership has never been placed this well with so much leverage to sit down and discuss issues constructively. Even the Tamil United Liberation Front (TULF) which became the main Opposition in 1977 could/did not engage constructively given the irrational stance of separatism it took at the general election after the Vaddukoddai Resolution of 1976 from which they could not deviate thereafter, and also because of the growing influence of the LTTE, which would have prevented the Tamil political leadership from engaging constructively in any event. However, the LTTE is no more now and if they desire so, the Tamil political leadership has the space to engage both constructively and intellectually. Having said that, the issue at present is, does the TNA use its current position for such constructive engagement with a view to lasting reconciliation? The answer is simple. Any objective observer could say that the answer is a resounding 'NO' and that the TNA is in fact a regressive force that could exacerbate and create new conflicts.
Take the TNA's stance on constitutional reforms. They have made their position abundantly clear that they will not budge an inch from federalism, a demand of the Tamil political leadership at least since the day S.J.V. Chelvanayakam broke away from the All Ceylon Tamil Congress (ACTC) and formed the Federal Party (FP). It is a different story that there is no legitimate reason for them to demand federalism (an issue that will not be touched today but perhaps in a future column) and that Chelvanayakam wanted Ceylon (as Sri Lanka was then known) to go federal even before independence, a fact which rubbishes their claim that they want federalism as a solution to the injustices caused to Tamils. The TNA knows, or ought to know, that it is unlikely that the South will agree to federalism or any sort of devolution that comes close to it, irrespective of what it is called, for the simple reason that the Tamil political leadership has not won the trust of the Sinhalese and for this reason alone, the South would be very apprehensive of granting the North any autonomy. With their talk of self-determination, traditional homelands, and all the other divisive rhetoric, the TNA has effectively managed to alienate itself from the predominantly Sinhalese South. Perhaps, this is by design and not accident, a point which will be touched on later in this column.
Infamous antics
The TNA is definitely not going to win over the trust and confidence of the South with antics like the infamous 'genocide resolution' of Wigneswaran's Northern Provincial Council which is dominated by the TNA. This resolution passed in February 2015 under the title "Sri Lanka's Genocide Against Tamils" claimed that all governments since independence engaged in a genocidal campaign against Tamils. Leaving aside the palpable falsehoods contained in it, this resolution is strongly reminiscent of the declarations made at the first national convention of the Federal Party in 1951 and the separatist Vaddukoddai Resolution of 1976. Then again in April 2016 the Northern Provincial Council passed another resolution demanding a separate province for Tamil speaking people. It does not take genius to comprehend at a fragile time as this where an agenda for reconciliation needs to be worked out without fuelling extremism on either side of the ethnic divide, the adoption of such resolutions inevitably create tensions within the polity destroying any hope of lasting peace. Such actions which could radicalize the impressionable Tamil youth demonstrate only an extreme level of irresponsibility which seems to be an enduring characteristic of Tamil politics.
Also consider the conduct of the TNA as the main Opposition and Sampanthan as Leader of the Opposition. Being the main Opposition, the TNA must act as the shadow government and must challenge the government on issues of mismanagement, corruption, ill-thought of policies, etc. Yet, for the last one and half years, the only occasions the TNA had spoken out was to discuss Tamil grievances or as reported in several newspapers in April this year, to justify the cause of the LTTE. What this shows is that the TNA is still a regional party with a petty ethno-centric mentality unsuitable for national politics. Its conduct also shows that the TNA is simply not interested in winning over the people in the South or solutions acceptable to all stakeholders. Naturally, one would be suspicious of whatever that is proposed by such a political entity.
The stance of the TNA with regard to the war crimes probe further substantiates the point made above. Although it is said that such a probe will be conducted against both the LTTE and government troops, as the LTTE leadership was decimated in battle, it would be mostly the Sri Lankan military personnel who will be on the dock. So in effect, the call for this prosecution is actually a call for a prosecution against the members of the armed forces. On this issue too, the TNA is vociferous in its demand for an international(ized) tribunal, meaning a western dominated tribunal. The present government, at the risk of alienating the Sinhalese, has made many conciliatory gestures towards the TNA, but still they insist on demanding the very things that may engulf Sri Lanka in another protracted conflict. The TNA of course knows very well that should the government embark on an international(ized) war crimes tribunal it could trigger a knee-jerk reaction in the South, which could, in the worst case scenario, take a violent form. The same goes for constitutional reforms based on federalism.
Signs of discontent
Because of the exclusion of the interests of the Sinhalese from the reconciliation and transitional justice dialogue which is catered exclusively to satiate Tamils, there are already signs of discontent among the Sinhalese. The government does not seem to comprehend that, as S.L. Gunasekara used to say, 'no single ethnic community has a monopoly over grievances.' Even the Sinhalese have problems, insecurities and aspirations which must be recognized and included in the reconciliation dialogue. Today, even the moderate Sinhalese are becoming more vocal and aggressive. Due to the marginalization of the Sinhalese the UNP-led administration's Sinhalese support base is dwindling whilst even President Sirisena's popularity among the Sinhalese is plummeting. Presently the Sinhalese feel threatened and marginalized due to the conduct of the current administration.
The ham-handed manner in which the present government suppresses the Sinhalese by labelling those who raise concerns as 'racists', 'traitors', and 'extremists', may work as a short-term strategy to silence and shame those elements, but the long- term viability of such strategy is suspect, especially if Sinhalese nationalism finds itself within a viable organizational structure. Although there is no such movement yet to represent the Sinhalese interests, if some such movement comes into existence the Sinhalese will undoubtedly rally around it. There is no telling that that movement will not represent a radical Sinhalese nationalism, which could create problems for reconciliation efforts.
In this context, the statements and actions of the TNA are only making matters worse as they could unnecessarily provoke the Sinhalese. The TNA does not act in the manner one would expect a responsible peace partner to conduct itself. However, although the TNA probably knows that their actions would defeat any hopes for reconciliation, why would they still insist on the very things that are bound to create more rifts and lead to further polarization on ethnic lines?
One could make an educated guess and say that the answer may lie in the genetic makeup of the TNA. The political survival of the TNA depends solely on perpetuation of ethno-based conflicts, as is the case with many ethno-centric political parties. If there would be a resolution of conflict the TNA would be a political irrelevancy in the North and East as the one battle cry that ensures the survival of Tamil politics, the vilification of the Sinhalese and the government, would then ring hollow. So, despite the many claims of the TNA that its interest is the best interest of the Tamils, one would be a little hesitant to accept this. The TNA, just like the LTTE, has never displayed much interest in the welfare of the Tamils to begin with. Even when Tamils in Jaffna were complaining of a dearth of drinking water, the Tamil political leadership was only talking about traditional homelands, federalism and prosecuting alleged war crimes. The TNA is, in fact, reminiscent of the elitist vellahla casteism which propagated the exploitation of the down trodden and poor Tamils by using them as a tool to promote its own myopic agendas.
The TNA, seen through the prism of its ethno-centricity and myopia, makes it evident that they are ill-equipped to be a constructive partner to negotiate reconciliation in Sri Lanka. In fact, the TNA is the anti-thesis of such a partner. With the TNA on the other side of the negotiating table all talks of reconciliation are doomed from the beginning. Unless the TNA goes through a process of ideological reformation, one could expect the reconciliation baby to be still-born, and this time around too, the Sinhalese and the government will be blamed for the failure to usher in reconciliation since evasion of responsibility has been a constant trait of the Tamil political leadership that filled the heads of thousands of Tamil youth with dreams of a separate Tamil State and sent them to an unnecessary and inevitable death, whilst offering their own offspring a far better life in Colombo and abroad.

Attack on ‘Sathhanda’ journalist is an attack on fundemental rights of journalists

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The following statement issued by the Free Media Movement, a media rights monitoring and documenting group based in Colombo.

( July 13, 2016, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) The Free Media Movement (FMM) strongly condemns the assault on veteran environment journalist and a Features editor of the ‘Sathhanda’ newspaper Daya Neththasinghe at a temple in Neluwa in Galle, yesterday. He had been attending a local discussion concerned over the environment destruction caused by mini hydro power plants. It is very alarming to find assaults and threats still continue on journalists, creating an unsafe and restricted environment to conduct their profession. The FMM is disturbed to witness planned attacks on journalists still continue despite the attempts made to ensure a free media and professional rights of journalists.

Supporters of a former Minister were attending the discussion at the temple and have assaulted the journalist when he started to express his opinion and experience on this environment destruction, when the organizers invited the relevant officials and journalists to express their views. The villagers and others who were attending discussion have intervened and have Mr. Neththasignhe to the Neluwa hospital for medical treatment.

Mr. Neththasinghe has been giving is opinion about an environment destruction caused be a mini hydro power plant (established on an approval in 2012) that was set up in Dellawa village in Neluwa. The discussion was taking place at the village temple. Since the inception Mr. Neththasinghe has been critical about the project in his reports to the newspaper. Due to the heavy protest on the mini hydro power plant the issue had been raised and questioned at the recent progress review meeting in Matara which was presided by President Maithripala Sirisena. As a result the President has instructed the Central Environment Authority for a special report and it is believed that these incidents disturbed the supporters of the mini hydro power plant.

The FMM insist on a free and fair investigation in to the incident. Legal action should be taken against such incidents making the society aware that these attacks are not a sign of a civilized society. The FMM strongly request the Government to conduct an unbiased investigation and immediately take proper legal action.

Have We Lost Our Way?


Colombo Telegraph
By Vishwamithra1984 –July 13, 2016
A dreamer is one who can only find his way by moonlight, and his punishment is that he sees the dawn before the rest of the world.” ~ Oscar WildeJR Jayewardene
The core mission of the government established by J R Jayewardene in 1977, after a disastrous spell of economic stagnation generated and sustained by the preceding regime of Mrs. Bandaranaike, was to make Sri Lanka an economically independent nation. The ‘dependency syndrome’ that Sri Lankan mindset had been infested with and the manner in which it had eaten into the very inner dynamic of our society, especially since the 1956-political transformation (’56 Change’), was observable everywhere. It is visibly manifest in the rural hamlets as well as the urban apartments and hallways where those who reside in the supra echelons of the upper middleclass frequent. Invasion into government departments, Ministries and other semi-government institutions by politicians and their cronies had a telling effect at the very outset and later it became quite the norm which it is today. Politicization of regular Sri Lankan life had an easy ride towards its acceptance as part and parcel of daily life of Sri Lankans, whether they belong to the poorest of the poor or the richest of the rich. It is not a story of a proud nation; nor does it represent a character or trait of a responsible and self-confident people. Close proximity to politicians and their cronies has indeed become a passport to convenience and expediency and a warrant that could open many a sealed door. Powers that be embraced these politicians and safeguarded them as they were the harbingers of ‘good news’ that strengthened their ranks, come election day.
Democracy, instead of becoming an archetypal vehicle for conveyance of the dreams, hopes and aspirations of the masses, was converted into a mechanism by which the wastes of society could get into representative and elected office. This tortuous process contributed to the worst potentials of democracy the resultant flow of which was a cascade of semi or uneducated men and women, and in some election cycles, petty ruffians entering politics. This fresh wave of politicians, whose credentials do not auger well for being distinguished representatives of the people, has left a pulsating stench in its path to political stardom. There is no doubt whatsoever that among that group could be found some gems of personalities who have contributed immensely to the system of governance as well as to the welfare of the masses. But exploiting the weakest link in democracy and prowling as saviors of the masses too has played its customary role in that cunning and diabolical elements have found easy passage via an extremely gullible electorate. The essential element of the process and procedure adopted by these not-so-credible politicians is buttressing the entity of government with heavier and denser power and force.

Text of the speech on the release of the book, ‘Grandfather’s Letters’


Photo captures the first Cabinet of independent Ceylon. Suntharalingam is on the far left. 


PROF. JAYADEVA UYANGODA on 07/13/2016


ViaWikipediaText of the Speech on the release of the book, Grandfather’s Letters by C. Anjalendran, at Barefoot Gallery, July 12, 2016.

This delightful little book is a selection of letters written by Mr. C. Suntharalingam to his grandchildren. C. Anjalendran, a grandson, has put them together, with a brief ‘Introduction”. Perera and Hussein Publishing House has published it with a highly professional layout and design.

Grandfather’s Letters running into a little over two hundred pages, is simply a fascinating collection of a host autobiographical letters written by a Sri Lankan politicians who lived through most of the last century. C. Suntharalingam’s political career spans through the last two decades of Sri Lanka’s British colonial rule and the first three decades of the country’s post-colonial, post-independence change.

A skeptical, yet avid, reader of biographies and autobiographies, particularly of those who think about themselves as makers of history, I too found this book quite fascinating. I have a somewhat academic interest in the ways of thinking, behavior and forms of interaction among the elites and ruling classes. One major reason for this fascination is perhaps that I am of peasant origins, and it is, in a psycho-analytical sense, a desire to know the social or the class ‘other.’ Indeed, one aspect of this book which I found exhilaratingly appealing to me is the sketch of how a young peasant boy – no disrespect intended — from the village of Urumpirai in Jaffna eventually became absorbed into the Sinhalese ruling class and finally led a lone rebellion in order to carve out his own personal corner in the country’s political history.

The letters included in this volume are indeed, as the invitation to this event tells us correctly, politically motivated ones. Mr. Suntharalingam has written them during the 1940’s. Having semi-retired from an astonishingly active career in politics, he looks back at his life and politics with a sense of some detachment as well as intense attachment. He describes events, explains his role in key and crucial moments in politics, and pronounces his own assessments and judgments of men and matters, with a sense of authority and at times studied disdain that can be expected from a patriarch in retirement.

Suntharalingam’s inclusion as a member of the ruling elite was a process facilitated by the opening up of opportunities for upward social mobility, during the mature phase of Sri Lanka’s colonial social change. This was a process that disregarded ethnic identity.  English medium education in science, law and medicine, coupled with individual brilliance, was a prime factor leading to the new class formation in Jaffna.  The story of the first half of C. Suntharalingam’s life, as depicted in these letters, is paradigmatic of this larger historical narrative.

These letters, written by Mr. C. Suntharalingam to his grandchildren, are partly autobiographical. They are also partly social and political commentary. The letters offer a carefully constructed self-portrait of the patriarch: a man possessing a brilliant academic mind, bureaucrat and politician with a sharp sense of judgment and tact, and a political loner who considered himself to be far superior to his peers, masters and contemporaries. With such an unmitigated sense of self-worth, and unconcealed contempt for one’s competitors, as repeatedly revealed in these letters, one has to be a loner, none else. Not surprisingly, Suntharalingam has fought almost all his political battles alone. Some of them, such as the campaign to block the depressed caste communities from entering the Mavaddipuram Kovil, were not really heroic battles. Mathematician and lawyer, Suntharalingam obviously did not care much about the larger meanings of some of his actions of going against the grain of history as well as social justice.

There are three themes, or narrative lines, that run through these letters. The first is the life and times of a young Tamil boy from Jaffna’s rural middle class in the early twentieth century. Amidst his mother’s anxieties, he had migrated to Colombo and later to England, for education. This was the time when Sri Lanka’s colonial modernity had begun to show its concrete results, as was to be later shown in Basil Wright’s iconic documentary film– The Song of Ceylon. The railway, road and telecommunication networks, rapid movement of people from one corner of the island to others, ports and ships that transported commodities and people to England amidst the threat of German submarines. Suntharalingam’s letters add up to the list — English-medium boarding schools, school curriculum for boys with mathematics and British as well as European history, the mixing of bright boys from different ethnic, cultural and ethnic backgrounds as more or less equals in the class room, and finally, opening up of the space for individual brilliance and a deep sense of individualism among the colonial citizens.  Suntharalingam was the individualist par excellence, the Kantian modern autonomous man, as revealed literally in every line of these letters. If he did not enter politics, he could have developed his persona into a renaissance-type intellectual all rounder – mathematician, lawyer, political thinker, historian, and philosopher.

The second theme is his bureaucratic and political career, which can be described as brilliant, eventful, combative and colourful.  His nickname was ‘Controversial.’ It could even have been ‘combative’ or ‘colourful.’  Suntharalingam describes with great openness and candour his close working association during the 1930s and 1940s with major figures of the emerging Sinhalese ruling class – D. S. Senanayake Oliver Goonetilleke, S, W. R. D. Bandaranaike, and John Kotelawala. While reading his account, one cannot resist the observation that C. Suntharalingam considered himself to be a leading member of the emerging Sinhalese ruling class. As his account also suggests, many educated and professional Tamils would have aspired to be in the Sinhalese ruling class as equals to their Sinhalese counterparts. Perhaps, it was the denial of this equality of status within the emerging ruling class, and being treated as mere servants, that ignited the sparks of modern Tamil nationhood in Sri Lanka, first among members of the professional elite. It was interestingly not a reaction to British colonial masters; rather, it was resistance against a bunch of class comrades who were getting ready to turn themselves into new masters. It was no accident that Suntharalingam was the first among professional Tamil politicians to imagine a separate statehood for a separate Tamil nation. His accounts of highly personal power struggles with D. S. Senanayake, Bandaranaike, Oliver Goonetilleke and John Kotelawala are replete with anecdotes that provide rare insights into how Tamil nationalism emerged as an elitist project, a product of inter-elite competition.

The third theme is Sri Lanka’s political change after independence. Suntharalingam was a Minister and MP during most of the post-independence years. In this process too, he did not seem to be a team player associated with any political bloc as such, but a single guerilla fighter. To be a lone guerilla fighter in the game of parliamentary political competition, is obviously a considered decision on his part. As his self-portrait painted in these letters suggests, he was obviously a man of strict principles and rigid convictions. His temperament was such that he was not ready to sacrifice his personal convictions in order to be a member of a political team called  a political party. He remained an ‘independent’, with no party affiliations to honour, or party discipline to adhere to. Vijayananda Dahanayake from Galle perhaps came close to C. Suntharalingam in thoroughly enjoying, and marking a unique name for himself through the political life of a lone guerilla. Suntharalaingam’s narrative of his interventions and actions during the 1958 communal riots is much about his own political character and personality as about those tragic events. He wanted, and managed, to do things by himself in managing the crisis in Vavuniya. He seems to have relied more on his personal contacts with the Governor General. Prime Minister, senior government officials and the local citizens than party or civil society networks, in bringing under control a potentially explosive situation of communal disturbances in his electorate.

Personal Relations

One of the things that continued to amaze me is the kind of personal relations that members of the ruing elite seems to have had. This has been a small group of men who had known each other in school, and in the university. They were members of the same debating society. They also nursed their own personal prejudices and grudges grown out of their juvenile fights or at a debating competition in school. They had no hesitation to use opportunities in their professional and political careers later to settle those old personal scores. Parliament was the forum for many of those verbal battles that were interspersed with the school boyish determination to settle old cores. But in times of trouble, they would help each other, yet, letting the other know that the old bitterness is not forgotten or forgiven. Anticipating the imminent possibility of house-arrest in 1958, Suntharalingam could even send his daughter to see the Governor General, Oliver Goonetilleke, to deliver a personal message. On other occasions, he could telephone the Governor General and address him by his first name, even though the tone of ‘hello’ from the other side betrayed some hesitation. (p. 149).

I suppose this is the same kind of first-name-calling relationship that other Sinhalese and Tamil leaders – Dudley Senanayake, J. R. Jayewardene, Lalith Athualthmudali, Gamini Dissanayake, S. J. V. Chelvanayakam, G. G. Ponnambalam, M. Tiruchelvam, A. Amirthalingam, P. Sivasittamparam – also probably had. Yet, the puzzling question is why and how that relationship broke down in political terms? There are vague hints of an explanation implicit in these grandfather’s letters. There has been no Sinhalese and Tamil ruling class integration in any enduring sense. Kumari Jayawardena has explained this paradox in terms of development of colonial capitalism and class formation in Sri Lanka. She attributes it to the specific underdeveloped, or ‘backward’, character of this particular social class. From the point of view of the first generation of the Sinhalese elite, it was a master-servant relationship that was destined to break up sooner or later.  This is what Suntharalingam’s letters disclose to the social historian.

Suntharaligam was an unusual politician. His major political positions were right-wing, ethno-nationalist, and embarrassingly reactionary. He opposed, along with the fellow members of the pre-independence indigenous elite, the introduction of universal suffrage and expansion of modern democracy. Many of his reactionary traits were also ones shared by most of his Sinhalese counterparts. Suntharalingam opposed the right of so-called lower caste Tamil citizen’s entry to Hindu temples, managed by the upper caste Hindus, his own class and caste brothers. He even mobilized the latter in open defiance of the social disabilities act, one of the few progressive social legislations enacted by Sri Lanka’s post-independence parliament. His Sinhalese counterparts were a little more smarter, and they avoided expressing openly their admiration of caste hierarchies. Suntharalingam was a Tamil nationalist and his nationalism was a racist variant. But his racism was not as rabid as that of K. M. P. Rajaratna or the post-1983 Sinhala chinthanites. He had no patience either to tolerate any moderate version of Tamil nationalism. Marked by all these embellishments, C. Suntharalingam was a major figure in Sri Lanka’s twentieth century politics. His letters to his grand children are source material for valuable information and insights.

Suntharalingam is not my type of a hero, since I am a Leftist and a socialist.  Yet, I immensely enjoyed reading his letters and learned much from them. The political motives behind D. S. Senanayake’s keenness to include ethnic minority MPS in the first post-independence cabinet, the move to form a party and a government of independent MPs soon after the 1947 parliamentary election, offering Suntharalingam the post of PM, are some of the details of S. W. R. D. Bandaranaike’s power struggle within the UNP leading to his break away in 1952 are truly captivating. His account of the 1958 ethnic riots is detailed and comprehensive. For students of the origin and spread of ethnic riots, the letters covering the period of 1958 are immeasurably valuable.

I have no hesitation whatsoever in recommending this book to all of you, to the interested reader and the scholar alike. Perera and Hussein Publishing House has done a commendable job in making these letters available in a nicely designed and reader-friendly slim volume. I sincerely hope that each of you after buying a copy of this book will begin your first letter to your grandchild, son, daughter or any young descendent tonight itself. It will help recover and re-launch the lost art of autobiographical letter writing.

UNP PARTNER JHU WARNS GOVT AGAINST CONSTITUTIONAL REFORMS & POLITICAL SOLUTION

jhu
( JHU monks in a political rally)

Sri Lanka Brief13/07/2016

Partner of the ruling coalition and UNP led United National Front, the Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU) has warned the government against giving any  autonomy to Tamil dominated North and East of Sri Lanka.vJHU former party of the Buddhist clergy has been anti devotion  and rabid Sinhala nationalist party from the beginning.  It leader Ranawaka holds the important ministry of Megapolis and Western Province Development in the present government.

The news story follows:

Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU) today warned the Govt not to get entangled in a bush of thorns by trying to introduce Constitutional reforms which had no consensus except for electoral reforms, the only possible reform at present.

JHU National Organizer Nishantha Sri Warnasinghe said the Govt should not implement any Constitutional reforms which could pave the way for division of society despite the reforms proposed by various factions.

He said JHU would agree only on bringing in electoral reforms and that other matters relating to the division of power, unitary State and religion should not be amended at the moment.

He alleged that the Joint Opposition (JO) was spreading a false opinion in the country based on the report of the Committee on Constitutional Reforms that the Govt was going to introduce Federal State, changing National Anthem, National Flag and introduce a secular State and added that the report had only introduced some options.

Mr. Warnasinghe told a news conference that the JO’s opinion was baseless because the President had clearly said in his election manifesto that he would not amend any clause in the Constitution which needed to be approved through a referendum.

“The claims of the JO that the Govt was going to amend matters related to the above were baseless. They have to be approved in a referendum and get a two thirds majority in Parliament,” he said.

He said the JO was making these allegations taking some negative points proposed by the Committee on Constitutional Reforms and added that the report had formulated by considering the suggestion of more than 3000 people across the country.

He said it was up to the Constitutional Council to decide whether to accept those proposals on Constitutional Reforms and said JHU does not approve all the proposals made by the Committee. (Ajith Siriwardana)

(Original Caption: JHU warns Govt against introducing Constitutional reforms)

Yahapalanaya scorecard



 JUL 11 2016
It’s public knowledge that space exists in the political arena for moral government which is now of presidential concern though its past meandering compelled the public to stumble on the implicit faith it had in this government. That integrity adorns Central Bank's hottest seat consequent to presidential reins being well directed is cause for public euphoria and hopefully will remain that way even in the days to come. By yielding to public opinion in the appointment of the new Central Bank Governor, Presidential priority to people's sovereignty was very conspicuous - the absence for which the past regime gained much notoriety.

It’s the restricted, warped mediocre mindset of the communalists always from the lower social strata that would develop a hiccup over the integrity of a cultured, educated scholar such as Dr Indrajit Coommaraswamy, unfailingly judging him by their own standard. From whichever quarter the appointment came, certainly it is a choice of refinement and intellectual taste proving presidential capability of making yahapalanaya a reality though some past derailment was to public distaste.

To be noted also in the area of rule of law and people's sovereignty is the outstanding ruling of the supreme court that upheld the locus stand of Singapore's Messrs Nobel Resources who charged that the tender criteria had been misdirected following the bids being opened of a tender worth over 60 billion to supply 6.75 million tonnes of coal to the Norochcholai power plant. Supreme Court viewed the Cabinet decision of September 22 to award the contract to Messrs Singapore Ltd. as invalid. Some of the events, according to Chief Justice Sri Pavan, ‘stirred the court's conscience.’

Functioning democracy

Many were the instances when such irregular tender procedures went unchecked during the past regime as inroads were built into the judiciary. That the rule of law is functional now is in itself a feather in the cap for yahapalanaya though subject to much ridicule in recent times. However, the deafening silence of government media units in conveying it to the masses is regretful.

Keeping people in the dark on measures taken to uphold their sovereignty is counterproductive. An essential feature of a functioning democracy is sovereignty where the people ‘s wishes and aspirations are held supreme which a country's constitution is all about. Politicising the three arms of government undermines people's sovereignty resulting in the loss of their freedom as well.

Besides all this is the latest clarion call for bureaucratic exclusiveness to the point of bureaucrats asking that they be considered above the law is fast gaining ground. There is a mismatch in this clamour for ‘legal untouchability’ of public servants and public accountability - the first paves the way for licensing immorality and the latter a moral obligation on the part of the state towards its citizenry which invariably substantiates sovereignty.

Yahapaalanaya is realisable only when people's sovereignty is upheld. From which ever quarters it may emanate, should the executive take on the ‘holier than thou attitude’ and presidential confirmation of such, does not augur well for democratic government rather a stampeding of the people's rights and supremacy is inevitably endorsed. Presidential wiser counsel has so far prevailed on the matter and hopefully will remain so in the future as well.

A corrupt bureaucracy contradicts the constitutional guarantee of people's wishes and aspirations to be upheld at all times. A public agency of the government duly elected by the people has every moral right to summon any public officer to present himself before an institutional body investigating into financial irregularities. The very thought of public servants calling for a full stop to these summonings itself goes against the very people whom they serve forgetting it’s the people's right to know the misdoings of a public service established to serve the people. This then is part of the right to information which promise the government has already fulfilled to its electorate.

Area of rule of law

An invisible yahapalanaya now operative is not without its moral discrepancies. Yet amid those shortfalls we have kept a few steps forward in the area of rule of law with space for improvement. That the white van with its recorded black past is no more and journalists aren't abducted among other things are those that uphold invisible good governance yet the marauding silence going by presidential admission of the state publicity agencies in the prime ministerial and presidential divisions to create awareness among the public on such is conspicuous which is why, ‘nothing is happening’ are the well chosen words that come off many people in the course of conversation.

The people's insistence on their elected government to take legal action against those that plundered monies rightfully theirs and the failure to live up to their expectations results in high degree frustration. Many believe that legal action against corruption is shelved because the MR camp once in power will help cover up whatever corruption of today's power wielders. Some even believe such action cannot be instituted - the system now brimming with MR's acolytes.

To top it all, these acolytes having connived with the now defunct regime, have the audacity to even demand the right not to be summoned before financial irregularities agencies. Not surprising then, if this plea is legally licensed it will be a boon and a blessing to cover up contemporary corruption as well if any.

People's sovereignty

A corruption-free government service is a great celebration to the concept of people's sovereignty. Honest government servants should challenge all irregularities coming off ministerial hot seats. The lackadaisical reply of ‘what to do, these are orders from the top’ are simply lame, servile and naive excuses for wallet fattening.

A spineless corrupt public service or the executive is to be blamed for the quagmire this country is engulfed in not to forget an equally corrupt silent media with rare exceptions - both unequivocally deterrent to public interest as much as a powerful executive presidency. Elections to choose people's representatives into parliament apparently of recent times is a futile endeavour as a bunch of crooks prepare to be replaced by some other - the only hope being an honest, principled public service in whom rests the country's redemption coupled with a strong, vibrant and equally honest media.

Politicians will always remain the same so eager to aquire for themselves - this country's perennial curse - exceptions so hard to come by. But the danger lies in the corrupt public servant and certain sections of their match in the media ever ready to co-operate with this morally deviant bunch that later resort to a readymade reply: “What's to be done I was forced into this from the top”, an answer not likely to find social acceptance except that it could be told to the marines! If this piece of unfair legislation in transforming government servants into ‘licensed vice men’ and corrupt ‘paragons of virtue’ find legal acceptance with the law becoming an ass - this time not a blind one, and is given a presidential nod, to be noted is the emergence of a very powerful corrupt executive that will replace the all powerful executive presidency whose now curtailed powers will be totally redundant. 
Rights petition challenges PM's request to 

Speaker

2016-07-13


A public interest litigant today filed a fundamental rights petition against the request made by the Prime Minister for a ruling from the Speaker on the implication and/or constitutionality of the “Singarasa Case”.

 Petitioner N.Dharshana Weraduwage cited Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe and the Attorney General naming him on the capacity as Attorney General as well as for the President Maithripala Sirisena.

 The Supreme Court, in the Singarasa Case, made a pronouncement that “The Constitution of Sri Lanka and the prevailing legal regime do not provide for release or retrial of a convicted person after his conviction is confirmed by the Highest Appellate Court.

 Supreme Court had ruled that therefore the State does not have the legal authority to execute the decision of the Human Right Committee to release the convict or grant a retrial.

 It had noted that the government cannot be expected to act in any manner which is contrary to the Constitution. 

The Court had also made pronouncements denying the constitutional competence of the President to accede the Optional Protocol of the ICCCPR. 

The Petitioner states the Prime Minister had said in Parliament that the government reconfirms the continued validity and applicability of the Optional Protocol to the ICCPR and is firmly committed to implement its provisions.

 Petitioner also states that Prime Minister had remarked that these Supreme Court’s pronouncements denying constitutional competence of the President to accede the Optional Protocol of the ICCPR are obiter dicta (an incidental or passing remark, opinion, etc) being unnecessary for the determination of the Singarasa’s application and do not serve as binding authority on the relevant question. 

Petitioner complains that in the event of such a ruling, it may trigger a Constitutional crisis.

 He maintains that such a ruling may be a clear violation of many Articles of the Constitution including Article 120 on Constitutional Jurisdiction of the Supreme Court, Article 125 on Constitutional Jurisdiction in the interpretation of the Constitution and Article 129 on Consultative Jurisdiction as well as Article 3 on the Sovereignty of the People, Article 4 on the Separation of Powers.

 He contends that the person (the President) responsible for the appointment of the Prime Minister unable to take prompt and suitable action to prevent the happening of the crisis shall be a breach of fundamental rights of the Petitioner. (S.S.Selvanayagam)

Health status of the Elderly Population of Sri Lanka


article_image
by Dr. Amara Satharasinghe,- 

Director General, Department of Census and Statistics

The elderly population in Sri Lanka has grown rapidly in the past several decades. They were an unprecedented 2.5 million in 2012, and is still increasing. One in eight Sri Lankans is 60 years or over. This is in contrast to about a sparse one in twenty persons a few decades ago. Demographers project that the aged will double by 2041. Every fourth person in the country will then be an elderly. The numerical growth of the elderly has been happening almost invisibly and inaudibly, Can we turn this hitherto helpless and dependent population into a valuable resource and a people that enjoys the evening of their precious lives. It is time to pay a concerted attention to this question.

Most developed countries have accepted the chronological age of 65 years as a definition of 'elderly' or older persons. While this definition is somewhat arbitrary, it is many times associated with the age at which one can begin to receive pension benefits. At the moment, there is no United Nations standard numerical criterion, but the UN agreed cutoff is 60+ years to refer to the older population. Lacking an accepted and acceptable definition, in many instances the age at which a person became eligible for statutory and occupational retirement pensions has become the default definition. In Sri Lanka too, cutoff 60 years and above is used to refer to the older population. The elderly are grouped into two categories: the ‘young old’ i.e. aged 60-79 years and the ‘old old’ i.e. aged 80 years and above.

Demographic transition is a model used to represent the transition from high birth and death rates to low birth and death rates as a country develops from a pre-industrial to an industrialized economic system. While Sri Lanka was still a developing country, the population experienced a demographic transition. Age structure of the population in Sri Lanka has changed considerably over the past three decades. Decreasing child population and increasing aged population are the striking changes. For example, the child population (below 15 years) has decreased from 35.2 percent in 1981 to 25.2 percent in 2012, while elderly population (above 60 years) has increased by 6.6 percent in 1981 to 12.4 percent in 2012. The percentage of people in the working age (15 – 59 years) has also increased from 58.2 percent 1981 to 62.4 percent in 2012. These changes in dependent population and an increasing working age population is demographic dividend or a great opportunity to be wisely utilized for social and economic development.

Sri Lanka has experienced a growing trend in population aged over 60 years since the 1950s, as a result of declining mortality and fertility rates. Starting mid 1940s the death rate declined from 19.6 percent to 6.0 percent. Subsequently, the fertility rate or the average number of children born to a woman also began a downward trend declining from 5.5 to 2.4. This trend was accompanied by a fall in birth rate from 37.4 percent in 1946 to 7.5 percent in 2012. Consequently, the Life expectancy at birth increased steadily. An average man in Sri Lanka can expect to live 77.2 years, and an average women 78.6 years.

This age structure transition in Sri Lanka has produced a demographic dividend, which is conducive for an economic takeoff. In this transition, the proportion of the working age population, aged 15 - 59 years (strong and young work force), is significantly larger than the proportion of the dependents. This is called as a "window of opportunity" or a "demographic bonus". According to demographers, this dividend will not last long since the elderly dependency is increasing rapidly. Therefore, this is an opportunity that needs to be used immediately.

The changing age structure has many and serious implications in almost all aspects of life. The disease profile has already changed from a predominance of infectious and acute disease to rising chronic, degenerative, and expensive to treat diseases. The ageing population will increasingly put pressure on health systems with the rise of chronic cancer, diabetes and cardiovascular diseases etc;. Older people have a need for more health concern and treatment than younger people and the pattern and causes of their illness are different. They need extraordinary care and geriatrics treatment that are expensive. Therefore, the provision of long term health care is a most serious issue. Promoting healthy lifestyles and broadening the use of clinical preventative services are critical to preserving the health of older adults and reducing healthcare costs and long-term care needs.

To meet the demand for much needed data on disease prevalence, at the request of and in collaboration with the Faculty of Community Medicine of the University of Colombo, the Department of Census and Statistics conducted a year-long household survey on health in 2014 covering the whole country. The survey assessed the prevalence of chronic and acute illnesses, accidents, regular use of alcohol and tobacco etc.,. This probably is the first countrywide survey of self-reported (without medical tests or clinical examination) health status in Sri Lanka. Self reported health surveys have been demonstrated as a valid and appropriate method for estimating many health related parameters. Annual sample of 25,000 housing units were selected to give reliable estimates by district level in the year 2014.

Data collected in this survey include prevalence of illnesses: chronic and acute; place from which the treatments were received; accidents; place of accident; health screening; smoking and alcohol use; possession of health insurance etc. Some summary findings are given below.

Diabetes, high blood pressure, heart diseases, stroke, cancer, asthma, mental illness, arthritis, and epilepsy were chronic illnesses considered in this survey while acute illnesses covered diarrhea, vomiting, fever, headache, cough, stomachache, wheezing, sore throat, joint aches and skin diseases. The variations of overall disease prevalence and other indicators by sex, age, geographic location, occupation, industry and employment groups are given in the report ("National Survey on Self-reported Health in Sri Lanka 2014") released to disseminate the findings.

According to the survey, the most prevailing (27.3%) chronic illness is high blood pressure. This is followed by diabetes (18.0%). Prevalence of arthritis and asthma are 8.0% and 5.9% respectively.

Findings of the survey on elderly population are briefly presented here. Chronic illnesses are those that persist for long time periods. Chronic illness, as can be expected, increases with age. Almost 55 percent of elderly population suffers from at least one chronic illness. That is one in two of elderly persons is living with a chronic illness. This is so with both men (55 %) and women (56 %). However, at the lowest levels of education – grade 5 or below – many more women (80%) are suffering from a chronic illness compared to men (37 %). This is a very wide gap which merits further study and action. In the population as a whole, about one in 5 persons (18 %) is affected by one or another chronic illness.

There is a clear difference in prevalence of chronic illnesses between economically active and economically inactive elderly populations. Among economically active population, the prevalence among men is 42% which is very much less than prevalence among females (61%). Among the ethnic groups, prevalence of diabetes and high blood pressure is highest among Sri Lankan Moors. Prevalence of diabetes in this group is 29% and 37% respectively. These percentages for total elderly population are 18.0% and 27.3% respectively.

This survey asked respondents whether they ever checked blood pressure, blood glucose and blood cholesterol levels. Among the elderly population 86% percent has ever checked their blood pressure. Little above 75 % has ever checked blood glucose and 58 % has checked cholesterol levels. From the elderly population not reporting high blood pressure, only one fifth has ever tested. Similarly, among those not reporting diabetes, only one in four has ever tested blood glucose. Only one third of persons not reporting heart disease has ever tested blood cholesterol levels. These findings may have implications on public screening programs for early detection and preventive care.

An acute illness is an illness that onsets very rapidly and is of short duration. Interestingly, acute illness among elderly is not different from the population as a whole. Approximately 15 % of people have experienced an acute illness over the one month prior to the survey. The elderly population is as could be expected affected much more by chronic than acute illnesses.

The elderly persons are more vulnerable to accidents. About 16 elderly person have experienced an accident compared 11 percent in the general population, and half the accidents have happened at home.

Perhaps an unexpected finding is that smoking and alcohol consumption by the elderly is very much higher relative to the whole population: smoking is three times higher (17 %) and regular alcohol consumption is nearly four times higher (16 %).

Further, from the Census of Housing and Population, 2012, it was found that one third of the elderly population is affected by functional disability: disability in vision, hearing, walking, remembering and concentration, self-care or speaking.

Despite very high levels of health problems, the elderly in our country seem to have little recourse to protective measures. For example, insurance coverage among them very low (3.2%) and which is much less than in the general population (11.3%).

Good health is a major factor in quality of life. A good quality of life of the elderly is an important aspect of the quality of life of the entire population. The implications of quality of life span wide across many areas of the life of people such as a happy and contended life at individual level, and resource allocation and utilization for growth and development at macro level.

The Table below summarizes the chronic diseases prevalence within districts and brings out the differences between men and women.